Dublin City Council is urging people not to hang coats on the Ha'penny Bridge to donate to the homeless. Ali Nic an tSaoir, Facebook

#WarmForWinter encourages people to hang winter clothing in public places for homeless people to take

A video of a Dublin City Council member removing jackets that were left on the Ha’penny Bridge for homeless people to take through the #WarmForWinter initiative has left Irish people shocked.

Read More: #WarmForWinter: Coat donations for the homeless hung on Dublin's Ha'penny Bridge

On December 7, Dublin woman Ali Nic an tSaoir shared a video on Facebook which showed a member of Dublin’s City Council collecting the coats that had been donated on the Ha’penny Bridge:

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The post has since been liked more than 3.7 thousand times. Ali later updated her post to include a link where people can donate to the Peter McVerry Trust, a homeless charity in Ireland.

The Warm for Winter Facebook page shared a screenshot of Ali's video that encouraged people to continue donating:

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The same day that Ali posted the video, Dublin City Council said in a tweet that people should not hang coats on the bridge for “health & safety reasons- it reduces pedestrian flows & causes congestion on bridge.”

Ali again updated her Facebook post to include DCC’s response but wondered why DCC didn’t say which charity shops the coats had been taken to and why people weren't given advanced notice.

On Twitter, DCC was largely slated for the move:

With several people calling for DCC to designate another public area in the city where donations could be dropped off, Clontarf Councillor Donna Cooney suggested community centers and public buildings as drop off areas:

Some respondents, however, also pointed out that the coats hung on the Ha'penny Bridge could become wet and unusable, and that people should instead donate to homeless charities.

#WarmForWinter organizer responds in defiance

Paddy Fryers, the Co Monaghan native who is credited with bringing #WarmForWinter to the Dublin area, told IrishCentral last week that he decided to stage donations at Dublin’s Ha’penny Bridge in hopes of getting more traffic this year.

On Monday night he returned to the Ha'penny Bridge to hang more than 40 winter coats for the homeless to take in clear defiance of Dublin City Council's statement.

The latest government figures report that 10,514 people in Ireland are homeless, including more than 3,800 children.